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Nunavut Iron Ore said early in the day that it was sweetening its offer, adding one exchange right per common share to a bid worth $1.45 a share in cash for 60 per cent of Baffinland.

Nunavut, backed by a private equity fund, also extended its offer to Jan. 25, after signalling it would do so last week. The offer, which valued the company at $570-million, had been scheduled to expire on Monday.

Later, Luxembourg-based ArcelorMittal , the world's largest steel company, said it would extend its $1.40-a-share bid to Jan. 21.

The announcement came hours before the 11:59 p.m. deadline. Arcelor's bid values Baffinland at $550-million but the steelmaker has agreed to buy 100 per cent of the company.

Under the revised Nunavut bid, each exchange right would give shareholders 0.4 per cent of a share purchase warrant. Each whole warrant would entitle the holder to purchase one common share at a price equal to the greater of $1.40, or the market price at the time of the warrant issue, within three years.

Nunavut said that if the warrants could not be issued, the exchange rights would be worth 8 cents each.

"They've certainly complicated matters, and they've done so very late in the game," said Jennings Capital analyst Peter Campbell. "I think that they're applying pressure here."

"I can see how people might require additional time to fully appreciate the value of this offer that Nunavut has put on the table." he said.

Baffinland shares closed up 1.41 per cent to $1.44 a share on Monday on the Toronto Stock Exchange, above the Arcelor bid but below Nunavut's offer of $1.45 a share.

ArcelorMittal said Nunavut's improved offer merely meant that its offer was now in compliance with regulatory requirements.

Nunavut currently owns about 10 per cent of Baffinland shares. The board has recommended that shareholders tender to the ArcelorMittal offer and the steelmaker has lock-up agreements with holders of 25 per cent of the stock.

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